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Apr 22, 2013
04/13
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now that makes no assistance because al-qaeda and sunni eight each other. that's like there was guidance go the united states. at least they made sure that it wasn't carried out no matter where they're from. of course, we're going to talk about boston and the rights associated withdhozvt dhozahar tsarnaev. but in order for me to do that i need to bring in my panel. we have joe williams from political reporter commentator and of course, national coverage editor--whatever reporter with politico. i'm reading all of these. and beth fouhy for yahoo news, and kevin cirilli. you can tell i'm in a fun mood. we want to give you an update. everyone knows that the younger brother was caught on friday after a shootout. i was watching all of joe's tweets on it. that's how i found out about it, literally. but let's watch that on abc. >> the bomb suspects now facing the death penalty. among those who lost their lives, 29-year-old crystal campbell the first of the victims to be laid to rest. the search for an explanation as the fbi questions 19-year-old suspect hospitalize
now that makes no assistance because al-qaeda and sunni eight each other. that's like there was guidance go the united states. at least they made sure that it wasn't carried out no matter where they're from. of course, we're going to talk about boston and the rights associated withdhozvt dhozahar tsarnaev. but in order for me to do that i need to bring in my panel. we have joe williams from political reporter commentator and of course, national coverage editor--whatever reporter with politico....
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Apr 22, 2013
04/13
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even as boston struggles to piece it's a back together, canadian police announced they have foiled an al-qaeda terror plot in toronto. at this time there is no evidence that it was connected to boston. this morning funerals were held for two of the victims. >> 29-year-old krystle campbell, a restaurant manager who was at the marathon, cheering on her boyfriend. friends describe her as have kind heart and wry sense of humor, and there was a funeral for lingzi lu, a chinese citizen who had just written her final exams link. an eight year old boy martin richard was killed as was a police officer. today a thousand mourners turned out to pay their respect. the west borough baptist church has threatened to picket the funerals because gay marriage is legal in massachusetts. but 200 teamsters came out to protect the mourners and the protesters were nowhere to be seen. there was a moment of silence for the victims, the city of boston, white house, house, senate and new york stock exchange all stopped pay their respect. dzhokhar tsarnaev is at boston's hospital. he is on vaent late for and handcuffed to
even as boston struggles to piece it's a back together, canadian police announced they have foiled an al-qaeda terror plot in toronto. at this time there is no evidence that it was connected to boston. this morning funerals were held for two of the victims. >> 29-year-old krystle campbell, a restaurant manager who was at the marathon, cheering on her boyfriend. friends describe her as have kind heart and wry sense of humor, and there was a funeral for lingzi lu, a chinese citizen who had...
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Apr 19, 2013
04/13
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government pinses this on another country on another group, al qaeda, even, what do we do?what do we do if connection? that's why they are going so slowly, so methodically. they have to specifically find that those two young men or one of them got guidance, got funding, got anything that will connect them to that crime to another country and they are not ready to do that yet. they do not have a smoking gun. >> pierre thomas, it doesn't appear there was much chatter coming in before the attacks, but how about overall? what has the intelligence been like, pierre, tom cass as, in the last several months of international attacks in general? >> well, we know, again, that there was no specific credible threat before the boston marathon. we did an exclusive interview with the attorney general earlier this year and he talked about the fact that while al qaeda's central had been devastated and if you look at the overall terrorism pictures, one of the things that concerned him most is that you had so many splinter groups and also people being radicalized on the internet, and also peo
government pinses this on another country on another group, al qaeda, even, what do we do?what do we do if connection? that's why they are going so slowly, so methodically. they have to specifically find that those two young men or one of them got guidance, got funding, got anything that will connect them to that crime to another country and they are not ready to do that yet. they do not have a smoking gun. >> pierre thomas, it doesn't appear there was much chatter coming in before the...
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Apr 22, 2013
04/13
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CURRENT
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surrounded the student that saudi arabia and al-qaeda. >> you know what's very interesting in this, the saudi national you know, the poor young guys splashed on the front payment in the "new york post," a lot of right wing chatter about a missing brown university student, might have been involved in this. and authorities said absolutely not. look, take a step back. there was an absolute burning desire to find a mideastern guy to be the suspect. and the "new york post" and other conservative outlets like glenn beck, they proved that they'll just make it up. it was such a burning desire to have the story fit the their at this that they wanted. that they were willing and they have the media tools to just start make stuff up and creating their own reality and creating their own parallel universe. where hey, it is a saudi. guess what. we decided it is a saudi. so that's the story we're going to go with because that's the story we want. if you just take a couple of seconds, imagine, you know, thank god glenn beck wasn't around on 9-11. thank god the fox news of today wasn't around on 9-11. th
surrounded the student that saudi arabia and al-qaeda. >> you know what's very interesting in this, the saudi national you know, the poor young guys splashed on the front payment in the "new york post," a lot of right wing chatter about a missing brown university student, might have been involved in this. and authorities said absolutely not. look, take a step back. there was an absolute burning desire to find a mideastern guy to be the suspect. and the "new york post"...
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Apr 23, 2013
04/13
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. >> canadian police say they foiled a plot that had support from al qaeda to derail a train. two men are under arrest. u.s. homeland security and the f.b.i. were also involved. >> the plan was to blow up a bridge in canada while a train was crossing, a train which toronto and new york city commuters use. >> this is a testament to the strength of our relationships with canadian and american law enforcement. >> stephen: yes, the royal canadian mounted police, or mounties, have thwarted an al qaeda-inspired terrorist attack, which is quite a fate considering how hard it is for them to go under cover. folk, i would like to say a word to our friends up north-- you canadians are a brave and heroic people. if i have said it once, this is the one time i said it. ( laughter ) ( applause ) ( cheers ) ladies and gentlemen, i-- i want all my maple-blood brothers to know that we would put it on the line to protect you if there was anyone who disliked you. ( laughter ) so thank you, canada. this is the greatest gift you have given our country since your years of service providing a plausib
. >> canadian police say they foiled a plot that had support from al qaeda to derail a train. two men are under arrest. u.s. homeland security and the f.b.i. were also involved. >> the plan was to blow up a bridge in canada while a train was crossing, a train which toronto and new york city commuters use. >> this is a testament to the strength of our relationships with canadian and american law enforcement. >> stephen: yes, the royal canadian mounted police, or mounties,...
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Apr 23, 2013
04/13
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they used an al qaeda internet description of how to make a pressure cooker bomb. seth jones, a counterterror expert at the rand corporation, has analyzed the marathon attack and how it was pulled off. >> ad libbed part of it and made some decisions on a few elements of the bomb making. but what's different about this is they took a simple recipe and then targeted a -- the boston marathon. >> reporter: why the marathon? because, officials say, it was there, essentially. and easy. not long in the planning either. >> it does appear though that the younger brother had not become involved until later in the process, perhaps a week or so before the actual attack. >> reporter: jones says the brothers seemed to have been inspired by the internet preachings of anwar al awlaki, the charismatic american-born al qaeda jihadist who has been dead now more than a year and a half. >> the older brother appeared to be the more radicalized of the two and drove both the need to conduct the attack as well as the preparation of the attack, that is, building the bombs. >> reporter: as f
they used an al qaeda internet description of how to make a pressure cooker bomb. seth jones, a counterterror expert at the rand corporation, has analyzed the marathon attack and how it was pulled off. >> ad libbed part of it and made some decisions on a few elements of the bomb making. but what's different about this is they took a simple recipe and then targeted a -- the boston marathon. >> reporter: why the marathon? because, officials say, it was there, essentially. and easy....
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Apr 24, 2013
04/13
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his new book is called takedown inside the hunt for al qaeda. i'm pleased, really pleased to have him here on this program. welcome. >> thank you. >> rose: so tell me what your take is on this-- on them, the two brothers. on what they did, where they came from, whether there is some election with-- link with people in chechnya that might have had some influence on them. what is the mudd appraisal of this? >> my first a operational is these two kids, i take the younger kid's word not because of what he says but because i look at the characteristics of the event and say from start to finish, where you have a kid who didn't try to hide himself in front of surveillance cameras, pretty basic devices. they didn't seem to have and after-action plan. they picked about the softest target you could find in boston. i look at this and say if they had an operational linkage back home i can't figure out what kind of capabilities that kind of operational linkage offered them. the other thing i look at is if you book end this from where you started 12 years ago
his new book is called takedown inside the hunt for al qaeda. i'm pleased, really pleased to have him here on this program. welcome. >> thank you. >> rose: so tell me what your take is on this-- on them, the two brothers. on what they did, where they came from, whether there is some election with-- link with people in chechnya that might have had some influence on them. what is the mudd appraisal of this? >> my first a operational is these two kids, i take the younger kid's...
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Apr 22, 2013
04/13
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this would be the al qaeda in the caucasus branch of al qaeda. we even know that the number two was there in 1997. there are several groups in chechnya and dagestan that have been deemed terrorists organizations by the united states and there are laws and insurgencies in those countries in those republics that resulted in so many bad attacks on russia we should have a certain amount of sympathy for what russia has gone through as a result of al qaeda's orientated attacks by the islamic extremists groups. >> it does seem that like jose padilla there might have been anger there about chechnya and using that as a rationale for joining jihady movements. having said that. one of the things that gets pointed out continuously is that if you are chechen, your beef is with russia and not the united states. >> yes but to a point. remember, chris, it's not just the chechnya conflict that was involved here. dagestan is really the far more important place to look. let's keep chechnya to the side. it's dagestan where he went. he probably was not just visiting
this would be the al qaeda in the caucasus branch of al qaeda. we even know that the number two was there in 1997. there are several groups in chechnya and dagestan that have been deemed terrorists organizations by the united states and there are laws and insurgencies in those countries in those republics that resulted in so many bad attacks on russia we should have a certain amount of sympathy for what russia has gone through as a result of al qaeda's orientated attacks by the islamic...
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Apr 19, 2013
04/13
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i don't really think al-qaeda is sending out 19-year-old college kids. the fact the bomb was so crude lead a lot of experts to believe that it was not well funded -- >> and the fact they tried to stick up a 7-eleven. >> exactly. and this did not fit the al-qaeda profile at all. >> to that point the only thing really sophisticated this week was how it was carried out at the boston marathon, but the devices were crude as you pointed out. obviously they had financial concerns or -- and they didn't have a car. the fact that they are trying to carjack a mercedes and possibly later a honda or whatever they didn't have their means of transportation figured out. >> did not the 1 brother drive over the other brother this morning? >> the latest from police was last night after robbing the 7-eleven and shooting the police officer at mit that they carjacked the mercedes they kept the person in that car for a half hour and then dropped him off at a gas station and continued on. and then one transit police officer was wounded in an exchange, and then there's a questio
i don't really think al-qaeda is sending out 19-year-old college kids. the fact the bomb was so crude lead a lot of experts to believe that it was not well funded -- >> and the fact they tried to stick up a 7-eleven. >> exactly. and this did not fit the al-qaeda profile at all. >> to that point the only thing really sophisticated this week was how it was carried out at the boston marathon, but the devices were crude as you pointed out. obviously they had financial concerns or...
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which have been associated with al qaeda groups the protesters have been demanding more equality they feel like they've been discriminated by the shiite led government of nouri al maliki they want a change in power in politics they want more rights they want more quality they also want a different political system now they are province forces than the heart of the insurgency and the war now it's the heart of the anti-government protests perhaps a fault line of sorts that threatens to divide iraq let's go and talk to some of the people. who don't believe in this election we don't believe in it because it's sick tarion sectarian. all the candidates for the government the system is unjust which is why we are promising here we are demanding change to the constitution and this government. these people will not be turning out to vote for saturday's provincial elections that's the first election since americans have left from the country in december of twenty eleven the government has postponed elections and several sunni provinces the anbar province where we're located right now as well as
which have been associated with al qaeda groups the protesters have been demanding more equality they feel like they've been discriminated by the shiite led government of nouri al maliki they want a change in power in politics they want more rights they want more quality they also want a different political system now they are province forces than the heart of the insurgency and the war now it's the heart of the anti-government protests perhaps a fault line of sorts that threatens to divide...
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Apr 20, 2013
04/13
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we have al qaeda 2.0, that is not al qaeda central, led by the pediatrician who took the helm after osama bin laden died, calling the shots. we have an arabian peninsula, try recruit residents of the united states to do acts of terrorism, even if they are not on a grand scale. >> brian, you have spent, i believe, two decade, educating people about hate and extremism. at your web site at the center, you identify extremist web sites and not just... this type of extremism. it's very widespread and i bet the list has gotten longer over the years. what is the answer? that we can all get along and we don't have to have tragedies like this, based based on hate? >> you know, to engage in the thing that you are doing, i think, one of the things that is really worrisome is that on both sides of the political and ideological spectrum, people feel disjointed from community. when people opt out, particularly in large numbers that, creates a fertile breeding ground for treem extremism and violence. what we need to do is foster a relationship of people to society and these brothers -- they opted out. ti
we have al qaeda 2.0, that is not al qaeda central, led by the pediatrician who took the helm after osama bin laden died, calling the shots. we have an arabian peninsula, try recruit residents of the united states to do acts of terrorism, even if they are not on a grand scale. >> brian, you have spent, i believe, two decade, educating people about hate and extremism. at your web site at the center, you identify extremist web sites and not just... this type of extremism. it's very...
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Apr 19, 2013
04/13
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qaeda that is the only policy they have but al qaeda is only a part of the problem the larger problem is the muslim brotherhood and macau we have empowered the regime which is the parent of al qaeda and tomas and every terrorist group and we have the power than the give and then money into the manpower we will look back at this period in the same way when we kicked the shot out of irene and and he has been one of the worst in vicious dictators in the world over the last century. a half to recognize radical islam is a problem and stop coddling islamic groups in this country that around the world we have to believe that democratic society it is not. they deny it as a dictatorship and muslim brotherhood believes in dictatorship of islam to take over the world. they may not take over that is what they believe in we should not be a party to it to espouse the of policies with the department of, and security we don't get it. >>. >> kinder score what they said that would be great but not to do with policy execution. fed is not a strategy we have to help train the military to help them with th
qaeda that is the only policy they have but al qaeda is only a part of the problem the larger problem is the muslim brotherhood and macau we have empowered the regime which is the parent of al qaeda and tomas and every terrorist group and we have the power than the give and then money into the manpower we will look back at this period in the same way when we kicked the shot out of irene and and he has been one of the worst in vicious dictators in the world over the last century. a half to...
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privately made improvised explosive device is described on an al qaeda web site in english. and it disappears and i do not know that the terrorists in boston may have learned it that way but but this is a widely available kind of technique to kill her so that doesn't prove that they would have direct associations with agents of this was or terrorist. sympathizers with a certain cause and. leaks from this time it is clear that direct associations may actually be of secondary importance in any event because the fact is that they. will tell us what you think about the boston bombing in about the investigation and how it could unfold now at dot com right now you can have your say let's take a look at the images right now on the screen more than half of you sixty percent vast majority think that the truth will never be revealed as of the second suspect will actually die in the hospital then seventy seventeen percent say investigators will prove that the brothers were guilty and acted on their own then twelve percent in this orange bar here you can see that a. third suspect will b
privately made improvised explosive device is described on an al qaeda web site in english. and it disappears and i do not know that the terrorists in boston may have learned it that way but but this is a widely available kind of technique to kill her so that doesn't prove that they would have direct associations with agents of this was or terrorist. sympathizers with a certain cause and. leaks from this time it is clear that direct associations may actually be of secondary importance in any...
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privately made improvised explosive device is described on an al qaeda web site in english and appears i do not know that the terrorists in boston may have learned it that way but but this is a widely available kind of technique. so that doesn't prove that they would have direct associations with agents of a specific terrorist group that they sympathize with a certain cause and you know and peace to learn techniques from this kind of groups is clear but direct associations may actually be of secondary importance in any event because the fact is that they kill people when you tell with terrorists before you with terrorism before your experiences along what do you think it's very difficult to answer this question probably but what do you think drove these two to do this heinous crime that we that they're alleged of carrying out. yes well of course you and everyone except for the the now one surviving member are going to speculate about this and they don't have firsthand knowledge but i think the narrative starting to become clear believe. the president of chechnya i think they're wrong a
privately made improvised explosive device is described on an al qaeda web site in english and appears i do not know that the terrorists in boston may have learned it that way but but this is a widely available kind of technique. so that doesn't prove that they would have direct associations with agents of a specific terrorist group that they sympathize with a certain cause and you know and peace to learn techniques from this kind of groups is clear but direct associations may actually be of...
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Apr 19, 2013
04/13
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melissa: the big question, is there any indication of any links to al qaeda? >> we learned this afternoon, so far in this investigation, and they are not far into their exploriningexecploring a -- expy see nothing yet to cause them to conclude they were acting on behalf of a chechen cause. there is a life style agazine that gives them what they call practical advice like thousand build the bomb, the bomb used in this case, pressure cooker bomb is laid out in the inspire magazine, that is an avenue they will go down to see whether they are true homegrown, islamic jihadists who got their training if you will all in a digital way. melissa: katherine thank you so much. all right on money, what we need to do to make sure a tragedy like boston does not happen again. but what is the cost of that? and can it actually work? stay with us, more "money"..lia. straight ahead. eate the future.. by clinging to the past. and with that: you're history. instead of looking behind... delta is looking beyond. 80 thousand us investing billions... in everything from the best experie
melissa: the big question, is there any indication of any links to al qaeda? >> we learned this afternoon, so far in this investigation, and they are not far into their exploriningexecploring a -- expy see nothing yet to cause them to conclude they were acting on behalf of a chechen cause. there is a life style agazine that gives them what they call practical advice like thousand build the bomb, the bomb used in this case, pressure cooker bomb is laid out in the inspire magazine, that is...
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Apr 19, 2013
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>> i think there is connections between the al-qaeda fighters as they got more radical. that is the worrisome thing. keep in mind that the u.s. has criticized russia for harsh treatment of khich ens. now, we have dhech ens attacking inside america. so the target for the chechen rebels has gotten bigger and bigger and not just russia but in this case, united states as well. >> bill: terrific knowledge. steve, thanks again. we are waiting this news conference. we expect it to begin at 5:30 eastern time. that is 12 minutes away on the clock. the governor will be there and mayor will be there, as well. we'll bring that to you in a moment. what is happening on the streets of watertown, massachusetts tonight. we have been told about the gun battle that forced it into overdrive in the dead of night. we'll talk to someone who caught it on video right here. >> we heard explosions and gunfire coming down the street. a car that almost stopped at the light but then kept going with police behind it. then it seemed like hundred cop cars coming. ♪ [ male announcer ] purpose elevates
>> i think there is connections between the al-qaeda fighters as they got more radical. that is the worrisome thing. keep in mind that the u.s. has criticized russia for harsh treatment of khich ens. now, we have dhech ens attacking inside america. so the target for the chechen rebels has gotten bigger and bigger and not just russia but in this case, united states as well. >> bill: terrific knowledge. steve, thanks again. we are waiting this news conference. we expect it to begin at...
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well a little missed a step back it surely is a hallmarks of al qaida but al qaeda doesn't have a monopoly on the use of these kinds of weapons indeed the instructions for these weapons are ubiquitous throughout the internet that being said the are a type of weapon that has been used in the middle east and the indian subcontinent and parts of asia much more than here in the united states very uncommon in the united states pipe bombs and other types of devices much more common and about a month ago. the southeast jihadist handbook on how to make such bombs along with other weapons was put out along with a magazine called inspire which is put out by a.q. a.p. al qaeda in the arabian peninsula we're just hearing here in the united states that there may be some connection to extremists in the caucasus between the older brother. and this group located in the region over in chechnya now as this investigation plays out we know we're going to be getting more information but since september eleventh in the wake of these attacks the u.s. launched its so-called war on terror given these events and th
well a little missed a step back it surely is a hallmarks of al qaida but al qaeda doesn't have a monopoly on the use of these kinds of weapons indeed the instructions for these weapons are ubiquitous throughout the internet that being said the are a type of weapon that has been used in the middle east and the indian subcontinent and parts of asia much more than here in the united states very uncommon in the united states pipe bombs and other types of devices much more common and about a month...
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Apr 21, 2013
04/13
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. >> well, actually, george, chechens have been involved in al qaeda since the beginning of al qaeda. they were involved in fighting for al qaeda in bosnia and they were involved in fighting against the northern alliance in afghanistan. there's a record here. how do you tell when someone gets radicalized? they're normal, happy kids in cambridge, and then something happens, a switch is flipped. how can the fbi, how can homeland security notice when that happens? when the radicalization occurs, especially when it's self-radicalization online. it's very, very difficult to do. what i want to know, what did the russians do when he went back to russia? they had already said that they were interested in him, he went back and spent six months. what did they do? did they follow him around? >> we're dealing with something of a new pattern since 9/11. attempts at terrorist attacks by people who have been in the united states for quite a long period of time who have become radicalized. not the times square bomber, had some connections overseas. but not parts of larger broader conspiracies. >> thi
. >> well, actually, george, chechens have been involved in al qaeda since the beginning of al qaeda. they were involved in fighting for al qaeda in bosnia and they were involved in fighting against the northern alliance in afghanistan. there's a record here. how do you tell when someone gets radicalized? they're normal, happy kids in cambridge, and then something happens, a switch is flipped. how can the fbi, how can homeland security notice when that happens? when the radicalization...
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Apr 21, 2013
04/13
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. >> they have also made an alliance with al qaeda, they've worked with al qaeda in pakistan and afghanistan. one of my constituent's son was killed in iraq by nine chechen rebels. so they're in the fight. he goes over there, the tools of trade of warfare for al qaeda are precisely the devices he built, this cooker pressure device, explosive device. there are reports they had suicide vests on. you don't learn that overnight. i personally believe that this man received training when he was over there and he radicalized from 2010 to the present. and then nine months after he comes back from the chechnya region, he pulls off the largest terror attack since 9/11. >> so there's a difference between being influenced by al qaeda or other terrorist groups and getting help and assistance from them. you think it's the latter. >> i think it's very probable that when he's in the region that's a very dangerous region that they're known for his tactics that he possibly could have been trained at that point. i believe he was already radicalizing. i'm questioning what the father's role is. the fathers alway
. >> they have also made an alliance with al qaeda, they've worked with al qaeda in pakistan and afghanistan. one of my constituent's son was killed in iraq by nine chechen rebels. so they're in the fight. he goes over there, the tools of trade of warfare for al qaeda are precisely the devices he built, this cooker pressure device, explosive device. there are reports they had suicide vests on. you don't learn that overnight. i personally believe that this man received training when he was...
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chechen extremists have long been known to cop parade and work and fight shoulder to shoulder with their al-qaeda brethren. shortly after the september eleventh attacks as a matter of fact the us ambassador to moscow alex version in fact went on record saying that we meaning the us have long been aware of the fact that al qaeda has been fanning the flames of the conflict in chechnya so what we're seeing here it once again if it is proven and there are signs that the older brother may have been influenced by certain. radical islamist ideology and if that is indeed proven that it shows that terrorist extremists are now working once again shoulder to shoulder with their with their. comrades. outside of chechnya and outside of russia it is a democracy initiative thanks you thoughts. a message posted on twitter by one of the suspects just hours after the boston bombing reads no love in the heart of the city stay safe people know earlier i asked the foreign affairs editor of chronicles magazine in chicago about the men's personalities of his thoughts on why they were granted asylum in the u.s. what we'
chechen extremists have long been known to cop parade and work and fight shoulder to shoulder with their al-qaeda brethren. shortly after the september eleventh attacks as a matter of fact the us ambassador to moscow alex version in fact went on record saying that we meaning the us have long been aware of the fact that al qaeda has been fanning the flames of the conflict in chechnya so what we're seeing here it once again if it is proven and there are signs that the older brother may have been...
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Apr 20, 2013
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may use this as another example of the war they say they have been fighting against al qaeda militants in the region for years. jake. >> all right, nick paton walsh, let's explore that aspect of the story. the suspects came from a volatile region of russia, they have ethnic routes in chechnya in southern russia. in the caucasus region. as russia clamped down with sometimes brutal force, what began as a separatist movement became a radical movement. horrific attack on a russian school left more than 300 people, many children, dead. joining me from washington, d.c., christopher swift from georgetown university, an expert on chechnya, and constitutional lawyer. christopher, the brothers came from a volatile region. did ethnic ties necessarily influence their alleged actions? >> you know, it is too early to say, jake. these young men would have been in the region, you know, at a very early point in their lives. i think it is much more likely based on the facts that are developing right now that we're seeing a radicalization process that began in the united states when they were in their la
may use this as another example of the war they say they have been fighting against al qaeda militants in the region for years. jake. >> all right, nick paton walsh, let's explore that aspect of the story. the suspects came from a volatile region of russia, they have ethnic routes in chechnya in southern russia. in the caucasus region. as russia clamped down with sometimes brutal force, what began as a separatist movement became a radical movement. horrific attack on a russian school left...
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we have seen al qaeda and iran plot against saudi targets. this is a new development but the idea that al qaeda in iran is not a new idea. they have long had a presence there. >> a marriage of convenience. >>> as tamerlan tsarnaev became radicalized did the u.s. miss key signals he was a threat. we will go live to moscow for more. >>> also ahead she is 5,000 miles from boston but feels the pain and shame for her family like it was right next door. in a timely fashion ojee and within budget. angie's list members can tell you which provider is the best in town. you'll find reviews on everything from home repair to healthcare. now that we're expecting, i like the fact that i can go onto angie's list and look for pediatricians. the service providers that i've found on angie's list actually have blown me away. join today and find out why over 1 million members count on angie's list. angie's list -- reviews you can trust. well, dad, i spent my childhood living with monks learning the art of dealmaking. you've mastered monkey-style kung fu? no. pric
we have seen al qaeda and iran plot against saudi targets. this is a new development but the idea that al qaeda in iran is not a new idea. they have long had a presence there. >> a marriage of convenience. >>> as tamerlan tsarnaev became radicalized did the u.s. miss key signals he was a threat. we will go live to moscow for more. >>> also ahead she is 5,000 miles from boston but feels the pain and shame for her family like it was right next door. in a timely fashion...
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al qaeda. >> at that time, yes. he was put in jail because nobody knew who he was he was put in jail for visa violation. what happened also in 1999 and this came out in the trial of one of the master minds of 9/11 in hamburg the three mastermind pilots of 9/11 traveled to kandahar specifically to train to fight in chechnya. at that time the al qaeda leadership told them we have enough person in chechnya. we have other plans for you. so it goes really deeply. >> bret: general, i want to talk to you tactically. i know militarily is different than operationally inside the u.s. the challenge of trying to find this guy right now if he has had training and he is, you know, basically a dog backed up against a wall? >> well, hiding is one thing. and he can probably successfully hide for a period of time. but he has got to move at some point and then he is vulnerable. they all know that they have great surveillance out there. it's a matter of time in my mind until they get him. >> bret: he may have been injured in this fire
al qaeda. >> at that time, yes. he was put in jail because nobody knew who he was he was put in jail for visa violation. what happened also in 1999 and this came out in the trial of one of the master minds of 9/11 in hamburg the three mastermind pilots of 9/11 traveled to kandahar specifically to train to fight in chechnya. at that time the al qaeda leadership told them we have enough person in chechnya. we have other plans for you. so it goes really deeply. >> bret: general, i want...
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privately made improvised explosive device is described on an al qaeda web site in english. here's what i do know that the terrorists in boston may have learned but this is widely available kind of technique to kill her so that doesn't prove that they would have direct associations with asians or terrorist. sympathizers with a certain cause and. techniques from this kind of clear. direct association may actually be secondary importance in any event because the fact is. czech republic's become somewhat unwillingly undeservedly become tangled up in the boston terrorist attack two after the internet lit up with confusion over where exactly what chechnya was the small north caucuses probably headed up being widely mistaken for the czech republic a member of the european union and nato and a close ally of the united states will twitter and facebook have been a awash with angry posts about the czech republic's role in the boston bombing say it's just a couple of the infighting got so bad at one point the czech government was forced to step in to clear up the confusion the country'
privately made improvised explosive device is described on an al qaeda web site in english. here's what i do know that the terrorists in boston may have learned but this is widely available kind of technique to kill her so that doesn't prove that they would have direct associations with asians or terrorist. sympathizers with a certain cause and. techniques from this kind of clear. direct association may actually be secondary importance in any event because the fact is. czech republic's become...
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Apr 20, 2013
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if you look at web sites that support al qaeda, they are celebrating this event. they're saying to the united states, you're weak. look at the united states. two of our brothers have got the united states tied up in knots costing them millions of dollars. this is what we're supposed to do. adam gadd dan, spokesperson for al qaeda, what he told everybody. the fatwa is alive. go out and kill americans wherever you find them. frankly do it without a lot of effort. neil: so, jack, just to bring my thick skull up to speed, you think there's going got to be a foreign connection, there has got to be a link to chechen group, islamist group, that these guys are not acting totally alone? >> what i'm saying there is distinct possibility. we don't know that. but that will be pretty much confirmed in the coming days. right now --. neil: but if there is, that alone, what does that tell you? >> well, it seems we have a new front because chechens haven't attack the united states. their effort has been independence and targeting russia. neil: but they got mad at us supporting russ
if you look at web sites that support al qaeda, they are celebrating this event. they're saying to the united states, you're weak. look at the united states. two of our brothers have got the united states tied up in knots costing them millions of dollars. this is what we're supposed to do. adam gadd dan, spokesperson for al qaeda, what he told everybody. the fatwa is alive. go out and kill americans wherever you find them. frankly do it without a lot of effort. neil: so, jack, just to bring my...
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al-qaeda has continued to try and keep what hold in the chechen but never. known john from what i've been hearing in the news it doesn't really seem like u.s. intelligence agencies have previously been evaluating the chechen republic as a hotbed for american enemies obviously you're saying that al qaeda has been recruiting there won't live fact that these two men came from the surrounding area change the americans government's attitude toward the region and more specifically its military focus. well how well the u.s. government reacts and how the military react certainly isn't something that. i have any real insight into i would say that since the collapse of the soviet union december one thousand nine hundred one the united states has continued to deal with russian issues based on its old cold war paradigm and to a large degree the us regionally came out in support of the chechen cause for independence it was the enemy of my enemy is my friend paradigm and the russians continue to be perceived as inherently bad inherently evil if you will going back to the
al-qaeda has continued to try and keep what hold in the chechen but never. known john from what i've been hearing in the news it doesn't really seem like u.s. intelligence agencies have previously been evaluating the chechen republic as a hotbed for american enemies obviously you're saying that al qaeda has been recruiting there won't live fact that these two men came from the surrounding area change the americans government's attitude toward the region and more specifically its military focus....
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when we manhunted al qaeda, i look at it more of a smaller group. there was not a lot of intelligence that came out. not a lot push about it. so i see this more probably as a very small group or cell. because the larger the group gets, the more chance you get to get information out. >> i have got to jump in. secretary of state john kerry is speaking now. let's listen in. >> and the rights of people are represented in many different ways. i ploebl stand here today to release again our human rights report. i want to thank -- i'm glad to be here with assistant secretary as we present this year's human rights reports. these reports send a very clear message that all governments have a responsibility to protect universal human rights. and they helped to blaze a path forward -- >> we're going to break into this. they're going over the annual human rights report. if he does make comments about the situation, we will obviously jump back in. i want to go back to you and ask the mayor what his gut instinct was. we have looked at social media pages. they had s
when we manhunted al qaeda, i look at it more of a smaller group. there was not a lot of intelligence that came out. not a lot push about it. so i see this more probably as a very small group or cell. because the larger the group gets, the more chance you get to get information out. >> i have got to jump in. secretary of state john kerry is speaking now. let's listen in. >> and the rights of people are represented in many different ways. i ploebl stand here today to release again...
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>> well, i don't think that canadians have the sort of military commission that we apply to al qaeda and taliban. they would go straight criminal process. neil: what if this -- god forbid, is more the trend, canadian thing, and arrest of this fellow in chicago last we week. i'm just i'm the one connecting the dots, but there is something bigger at play. you are talking about not only security but legal nightmare. >> yeah, i'm not sure of legal situation. as far as you know, situation right now, in the connections, that activity, but i tell you, where there is if you will missing ingredient. the kinetic response. law enforcement, phenomenal record since 9/11. where a collect of work needs to be done right now is countering that narrative, that mutant toxic form of al qaedaism, there is something that happens with young men who is susceptible and self motivates and self recruits to that kind of ideology, internet, a lot of different sources for that thing. there is a very important period though from right here in thinking about it to where it guess to a constructive step. so, that is
>> well, i don't think that canadians have the sort of military commission that we apply to al qaeda and taliban. they would go straight criminal process. neil: what if this -- god forbid, is more the trend, canadian thing, and arrest of this fellow in chicago last we week. i'm just i'm the one connecting the dots, but there is something bigger at play. you are talking about not only security but legal nightmare. >> yeah, i'm not sure of legal situation. as far as you know,...
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now, police tell us tonight the two suspects were getting support from al qaeda in iran. authorities say there's no link to the boston bombing. paula newton is in ottawa with the latest. paula, how close were they to actually carrying out the attack? >> reporter: erin, police are saying the attack was not imminent at all but say the threat was real that these people wanted to kill people, they wanted to hurt people. they were sensitive about the fact that the attack was not imminent. why? they were listening in on this plot and putting the pieces together, bugging their homes and cell phones to try to figure out what the plot was about. they were not canadian citizens and in the country several months and they were tipped off by the muslim community that they apparently led them to believe these two people were plotting something. they didn't know what and that gave them the tip off to bug them. congressman peter king says this was a train from toronto to new york. that's something that police here will not confirm for us. certainly chilling details about that kind of a m
now, police tell us tonight the two suspects were getting support from al qaeda in iran. authorities say there's no link to the boston bombing. paula newton is in ottawa with the latest. paula, how close were they to actually carrying out the attack? >> reporter: erin, police are saying the attack was not imminent at all but say the threat was real that these people wanted to kill people, they wanted to hurt people. they were sensitive about the fact that the attack was not imminent. why?...
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and so much of our effort has been focused on al qaeda related or al qaeda dictated or driven attacks. what we've seen so far, there is more to come out. these two gentlemen may have been radicalized but there are no direct lirngs to al qaeda so we'll step back and look at it from a muslim extremist perspective, are there other areas, other reasonings such as asia and chechnya, that we'll need to pay more attention to. >> so roger, quickly does that become an intelligence issue? is that an intelligence gathering issue? >> it is an intelligence issue but also a community issue. of the many plots disrupted around the united states, many were disrupted because of a tip-off from the local community to law enforcement. so we have focused so much on specific ethnic groups since 9/11 in terms of potential threats. maybe we need to open the aperture a little bit. not because the communities pose a threat to the united states but because there are individuals we need to pay attention to. >> when you talk about other groups, not al qaeda but other overseas groups that you might want to investig
and so much of our effort has been focused on al qaeda related or al qaeda dictated or driven attacks. what we've seen so far, there is more to come out. these two gentlemen may have been radicalized but there are no direct lirngs to al qaeda so we'll step back and look at it from a muslim extremist perspective, are there other areas, other reasonings such as asia and chechnya, that we'll need to pay more attention to. >> so roger, quickly does that become an intelligence issue? is that...
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they get al qaeda. >> yeah. >> and what happens is al qaeda has this process, this gentle persuasion where they believe that they are really -- they convince themselves. i mean, it's not brainwash. they convince themselves. once they start inculcating them, you know, khalid shaikh mohammed said it, that the most important thing to be a member of al qaeda was not whether you could speak a foreign language, military training, your ability to shoot a gun, or make a bomb. the most important thing was your willingness for self-sacrifice. that's how you get in. and that's what they've built that cult on. now, in the last few years, it's diminished with -- diminished with -- because we diminished al qaeda and bin laden. so it's diminished but it's not gone away. >> let me go back to roger cressi because we don't want to generalize on here. i like to find patterns. it's easier if you can figure out what is going on and everything being phenomenal and chaotic, you'd like to think -- when people are willing to kill people by the numbers, lots of people, it's usually a deep religious thing, lik
they get al qaeda. >> yeah. >> and what happens is al qaeda has this process, this gentle persuasion where they believe that they are really -- they convince themselves. i mean, it's not brainwash. they convince themselves. once they start inculcating them, you know, khalid shaikh mohammed said it, that the most important thing to be a member of al qaeda was not whether you could speak a foreign language, military training, your ability to shoot a gun, or make a bomb. the most...
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qaeda or it was a terrorist attack, all the questions that come in the wake of something like this, i can probably confidently say that that is one that is not in the top five guesses, brothers from chechnya. if they take suspect number two into custody, they will be asking him for reasons, motives, have they been in the united states, reports now saying they were in the united states for one to two years. they may have come here specifically to carry out these attacks. that is the kind of questions they will want to ask, and the investigation will go off in that direction if and when suspect two is taken into custody, hopefully alive so we can get some real answers behind his motive. , suspectem is dead number one with the black hat in the photos. , the 19-er brother year-old, still on the run and dangerous. for those joining us now on al jazeera, it is about 7:15 in the morning in boston. all these developments took place overnight in the past six or seven hours. this one suspect still on the run, presumably believed to be in the watertown area, which is in effective lockdown. peo
qaeda or it was a terrorist attack, all the questions that come in the wake of something like this, i can probably confidently say that that is one that is not in the top five guesses, brothers from chechnya. if they take suspect number two into custody, they will be asking him for reasons, motives, have they been in the united states, reports now saying they were in the united states for one to two years. they may have come here specifically to carry out these attacks. that is the kind of...
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but the ideas of al qaeda, the kind of franchises of al qaeda, preachers who are preaching things in various languages are all over the place. >> rose: it seems to be that people who become radicalized and then either because they can go on the internet and follow some -- somebody preaching -- >> it can only be discredited by the decency and effectiveness moral and otherwise of our way of life and -- which has -- would not react well to the 9/11 aftermath. there was so many things that we did wrong. whether it had to do with the waging of war or the trampling of civil liberties and i hope that we've learned our lesson. so when i first started hearing words from certain senators about "let's treat him as an enemy combatant." i don't know the motivation, but i blanch at it. >> rose: yeah. >> this is a country -- >> rose: they modified that and said they didn't want them to be tried as -- >> they can no longer do it. by the way, we have a 100% conviction rate of terrorists on our soil. >> rose: tried in civilian courts. >> absolutely. >> rose: yeah. >> this is a very effective justice s
but the ideas of al qaeda, the kind of franchises of al qaeda, preachers who are preaching things in various languages are all over the place. >> rose: it seems to be that people who become radicalized and then either because they can go on the internet and follow some -- somebody preaching -- >> it can only be discredited by the decency and effectiveness moral and otherwise of our way of life and -- which has -- would not react well to the 9/11 aftermath. there was so many things...